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Using names and addresses—many of them out of date—from the 1966 file, I pored over phone books, leaned on officials for death certificates, called on funeral homes and appealed to the Social Security Administration to forward my letters seeking interviews with people who might have something relevant to say. I reached out to scientists and pharmaceutical companies for arcana about muscle relaxants. Doors were slammed in my face, and telephones were slammed down in my ear. The worst moments, of course, were when I had to tell people that the death of a parent or child, awful as it may have been at the time, was actually believed to have been suspicious. No one had ever told them that.
My efforts to speak with Jascalevich came to naught. He had resigned from Riverdell after the investigation but continued to practice in New Jersey. I sent him registered letters, but all I got were the return receipts. I phoned his office, but got only his secretary. I sat in front of his office in bitter cold and waited in vain for him to appear. In his confused and confusing deposition in 1966, he had said he used the curare in experiments on "dying dogs" at a medical school in Jersey City and had brought the used vials back to the hospital, miles away in Oradell, for record-keeping.
I tried everything to nail this down, hunting from Jersey City to a dusty hamlet in South Carolina, where a former dog attendant from whom Jascalevich said he had gotten the animals was then living. But I could find no one who had given any dogs to Jascalevich.
The Times published my first articles about the case in January 1976, identifying Jascalevich only as Dr. X to protect the privacy of someone who had not been charged with any crime. It was big news. The wire services picked it up, and the leading local paper, the Record, assigned 13 reporters to the story. By then Prosecutor Woodcock had decided—for reasons of his own—to reopen the case. He began by exhuming the bodies of five Riverdell patients who had not been given curare during surgery. Within months his experts, using newly developed techniques in multiple laboratories, reported finding curare in three of the bodies; the tests on one body were inconclusive, and the last corpse was too deteriorated for testing.
Jascalevich—whose name had become public during the investigation—was indicted on five counts of murder. I moved on to other stories.
When the trial began, in February 1978, the surgeon's attorney, Raymond A. Brown, subpoenaed me for oral testimony and moved to bar me from either covering or observing the trial on the grounds that I would be a witness and was not "above the law." Judge William J. Arnold asked Brown what kind of evidence he expected me to give, and Brown refused to tell him. "I will not do it," he said. "...I will not tell you or any living man anything about [Jascalevich's] defense."
Arnold ruled that I would have to testify. "The rights of the press under the First Amendment," he wrote, "can never exceed the [Sixth Amendment] rights of a defendant to a fair and impartial trial."
Brown then went further: he served me with the broadest subpoena ever issued to an American reporter, demanding all notes of interviews, memoranda, pictures, recordings and "other writings" relating to a list of 193 potential witnesses in the case. Everything, Brown said, was crucial for the defense—"I want to see it all."


Comments
Is a bio of Guy W Calissi available.
Posted by John J Koch on August 19,2009 | 12:22PM
See http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Guy_W._Calissi for a newly-created bio on Wikipedia.
Posted by Alan Sohn on October 19,2009 | 08:38AM